Navy working to finalize Greyhound-to-Osprey transition

The Navy is trying to finalize plans to replace the aging fleet of C-2A Greyhounds with the tilt-rotor V-22 Ospreys, an aircraft that will comprise a new training squadron in either Norfolk, Virginia, or San Diego, California.

The Navy plans to hold a public hearing for locals in Coronado on Feb. 7 to hash out the details, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune.

The C-2A Greyhounds have been the Navy’s primary transport vehicle to underway aircraft carriers for five decades. But the Pentagon believes the propeller planes have done their time and should be replaced.

On Nov. 22, a Greyhound crashed into the Pacific Ocean while in passage to the carrier Ronald Reagan, killing three sailors.

The Navy’s Ospreys will differ slightly from their Marine and Air Force cousins, having room for more fuel, improved communications gear and a PA system in the main cabin, The Drive reported.

The Ospreys underwent a series of tests last summer, including a two-week assessment in August by the Marine Operational Test and Evaluation Squadron 1 aboard the aircraft carrier Carl Vinson. Officers were impressed with the aircraft’s versatility.

“It gives us a lot of options, a lot of flexibility, in the sense that we can recover it more as a helicopter or sometimes we can treat it more like a fixed-wing aircraft,” Vinson’s air boss, Cmdr. Lucas Kadar, said in a press release at the time.

Once in service, the Ospreys will pick up personnel, mail and cargo from supply centers and deliver them to aircraft carriers worldwide.

According to the Navy’s current timeline, the Ospreys should be fully operational by 2024. The Greyhounds should be retired by 2026 and the transition should be complete by 2028.